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Posted: 2024-05-09 19:08:00

Deputy Liberal leader Sussan Ley has hit back at a colleague's claim that she made the wrong call about a controversial carbon project in government, exposing a split at the highest levels of the Coalition. 

Farmers, environmentalists and Australia's richest woman, Gina Rinehart, have united in opposition against the planned carbon capture and storage (CCS) project in the Great Artesian Basin, Australia's largest groundwater resource.

The three-year trial in Queensland's Darling Downs would involve capturing and liquefying CO2 from Glencore's Millmerran coal-fired power station and pumping it deep into the aquifer.

agforce pic

Agriculture leaders, politicians, farmers and children were seen waving signs. (ABC News: Lucas Hill)

Littleproud says Ley made wrong call

Queensland's powerful farm lobby, AgForce, believes it poses an unacceptable risk and has launched legal action which it hopes will force the Commonwealth to assess, and ultimately reject, the project under federal environment laws.

In 2022, the then-Morrison government told Glencore the project did not require scrutiny or approval under the laws, leaving environmental assessments to Queensland.

When asked this week if that was the right decision, Nationals leader David Littleproud said "no".

"It was a desktop review done by the environment minister at the time, Sussan Ley, and she didn’t get it right.

"It wasn’t on her radar to the extent that it should’ve been”.

Sussan Ley wears a white jacket and looks off camera.

Sussan Ley has hit back at her colleague's claims she made the wrong call on Glencore's CCS project. (ABC News: Matt Roberts)

Responding to the accusation, Ms Ley labelled Mr Littleproud's comments "a misconstruction of what actually occurred when we were in government".

"The suggestion that I personally took a decision to let the project proceed is wrong," she told the ABC.

"The departmental decision didn't advance the project, it didn't green-light the project.

"It was a technical, legal decision that effectively said the Environment Protection Biodiversity Conservation Act, as written, could not be used."

Submissions to a Senate inquiry reveal Glencore referred its project to the federal environment department in January 2022 and three weeks later, received advice that it would not require assessment under the EPBC Act. 

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